Los Angeles Times

Exide cleanup plan targets 2,500 sites

Parcels are among the most contaminat­ed near former battery recycling plant.

- By Tony Barboza tony.barboza@latimes.com Times staff writer Ben Poston contribute­d to this report.

Lead will be removed from the soil of 2,500 of the worst-contaminat­ed residentia­l properties, including dozens of child-care centers, near a closed battery recycling plant under a plan released Thursday by state regulators.

The Department of Toxic Substances Control plan sets in motion the next two years of a massive cleanup project spanning more than 10,000 properties across seven southeast Los Angeles communitie­s around the Exide Technologi­es facility.

Crews have so far tested more than 8,200 yards, with more than 95% exceeding California’s 80 parts per million health standard for residentia­l soil.

Based on sampling results released Thursday on 7,011 of those parcels, about 27% would qualify for cleanup under the plan, which has new guidelines for which properties will be cleaned based on lead contaminat­ion levels.

Among those slated for cleanup are 46 child-care centers, five private schools and two parks in the cleanup zone extending 1.7 miles from the former plant.

To date, 261 properties have been cleaned since elevated levels of the poisonous metal were first discovered in neighborho­ods near the plant more than three years ago, according to the department.

There is no specific start date for the next phase of cleanup, but department officials said work would begin after a contractor is selected in August.

Lead spewed for decades from the Vernon plant. Georgia-based Exide agreed to shut it down permanentl­y in March 2015 in a deal with federal prosecutor­s.

The department has not backed down from its commitment to clean soil from each of the 2,500 properties until lead no longer exceeds a concentrat­ion of 80 ppm, Director Barbara Lee said. She said the ability to clean the remaining homes “depends entirely on available funding.”

Lee said the department is working with the state attorney general’s office to recover cleanup costs and “is vigorously pursuing Exide as a responsibl­e party.”

For now, the plan is limited to how many properties can be cleaned using $176.6 million in public funds set aside for the project in legislatio­n signed last year by Gov. Jerry Brown.

The cleanup is the largest of residentia­l homes ever in California.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? ALICIA RIVERA, left, Maya Herrera and Carmen Garcia protest against Exide in Vernon in 2014.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times ALICIA RIVERA, left, Maya Herrera and Carmen Garcia protest against Exide in Vernon in 2014.

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